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Predicting pathologic tumor response to chemoradiotherapy with histogram distances characterizing longitudinal changes in 18 F‐FDG uptake patterns
Author(s) -
Tan Shan,
Zhang Hao,
Zhang Yongxue,
Chen Wengen,
D'Souza Warren D.,
Lu Wei
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1118/1.4820445
Subject(s) - nuclear medicine , histogram , positron emission tomography , receiver operating characteristic , standardized uptake value , medicine , mann–whitney u test , bin , chemoradiotherapy , radiology , mathematics , radiation therapy , artificial intelligence , algorithm , computer science , image (mathematics)
Purpose: A family of fluorine‐18 ( 18 F)‐fluorodeoxyglucose ( 18 F‐FDG) positron‐emission tomography (PET) features based on histogram distances is proposed for predicting pathologic tumor response to neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (CRT). These features describe the longitudinal change of FDG uptake distribution within a tumor.Methods: Twenty patients with esophageal cancer treated with CRT plus surgery were included in this study. All patients underwent PET/CT scans before (pre‐) and after (post‐) CRT. The two scans were first rigidly registered, and the original tumor sites were then manually delineated on the pre‐PET/CT by an experienced nuclear medicine physician. Two histograms representing the FDG uptake distribution were extracted from the pre‐ and the registered post‐PET images, respectively, both within the delineated tumor. Distances between the two histograms quantify longitudinal changes in FDG uptake distribution resulting from CRT, and thus are potential predictors of tumor response. A total of 19 histogram distances were examined and compared to both traditional PET response measures and Haralick texture features. Receiver operating characteristic analyses and Mann‐Whitney U test were performed to assess their predictive ability.Results: Among all tested histogram distances, seven bin‐to‐bin and seven crossbin distances outperformed traditional PET response measures using maximum standardized uptake value (AUC = 0.70) or total lesion glycolysis (AUC = 0.80). The seven bin‐to‐bin distances were: L 2 distance (AUC = 0.84), χ 2 distance (AUC = 0.83), intersection distance (AUC = 0.82), cosine distance (AUC = 0.83), squared Euclidean distance (AUC = 0.83), L 1 distance (AUC = 0.82), and Jeffrey distance (AUC = 0.82). The seven crossbin distances were: quadratic‐chi distance (AUC = 0.89), earth mover distance (AUC = 0.86), fast earth mover distance (AUC = 0.86), diffusion distance (AUC = 0.88), Kolmogorov‐Smirnov distance (AUC = 0.88), quadratic form distance (AUC = 0.87), and match distance (AUC = 0.84). These crossbin histogram distance features showed slightly higher prediction accuracy than texture features on post‐PET images.Conclusions: The results suggest that longitudinal patterns in 18 F‐FDG uptake characterized using histogram distances provide useful information for predicting the pathologic response of esophageal cancer to CRT.

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